EXPORTS

Finds the first, longest match of the regular expression RegExp in String. This function searches for the longest possible match and returns the first one found if there are several expressions of the same length. It returns as follows:

{match,Start,Length}

if the match succeeded. Start is the starting
position of the match, and Length is the length of
the matching string.

Finds all non-overlapping matches of the
expression RegExp in String.
It returns as follows:

{match, Matches}

if the regular expression was correct.
The list will be empty if there was no match. Each element in the list looks like {Start, Length}, where Start is the starting position of the match, and Length is the length of the matching string.

Substitutes the first occurrence of a substring matching RegExp in String with the string New. A & in the string New is replaced by the matched substring of String. \& puts a literal & into the replacement string. It returns as follows:

{ok,NewString,RepCount}

if RegExp is correct. RepCount is the number of replacements which have been made
(this will be either 0 or 1).

String is split into fields (sub-strings) by the
regular expression RegExp.

If the separator expression is " " (a single space),
then the fields are separated by blanks and/or tabs and
leading and trailing blanks and tabs are discarded. For all
other values of the separator, leading and trailing blanks
and tabs are not discarded. It returns:

{ok, FieldList}

to indicate that the string has been split up into the fields of
FieldList.

{error, Error}

if there is an error in RegExp.

sh_to_awk(ShRegExp) -> AwkRegExp

Types:

ShRegExp = AwkRegExp = string()

Converts the sh type regular expression
ShRegExp into a full AWK regular
expression. Returns the converted regular expression
string. sh expressions are used in the shell for
matching file names and have the following special
characters:

*

matches any string including the null string.

?

matches any single character.

[...]

matches any of the enclosed characters. Character
ranges are specified by a pair of characters separated
by a -. If the first character after [ is a
!, then any character not enclosed is matched.

It may sometimes be more practical to use sh type
expansions as they are simpler and easier to use, even though they are not as powerful.

Parses the regular expression RegExp and builds the
internal representation used in the other regular expression
functions. Such representations can be used in all of the
other functions instead of a regular expression string. This
is more efficient when the same regular expression is used
in many strings. It returns:

The regular expressions allowed here is a subset of the set found
in egrep and in the AWK programming language, as
defined in the book, The AWK Programming Language, by A. V. Aho, B. W. Kernighan, P. J. Weinberger. They are
composed of the following characters:

c

matches the non-metacharacter c.

\c

matches the escape sequence or literal character c.

.

matches any character.

^

matches the beginning of a string.

$

matches the end of a string.

[abc...]

character class, which matches any of the characters
abc... Character ranges are specified by a pair of
characters separated by a -.

[^abc...]

negated character class, which matches any character except
abc....

r1 | r2

alternation. It matches either r1 or r2.

r1r2

concatenation. It matches r1 and then r2.

r+

matches one or more rs.

r*

matches zero or more rs.

r?

matches zero or one rs.

(r)

grouping. It matches r.

The escape sequences allowed are the same as for Erlang
strings:

\b

backspace

\f

form feed

\n

newline (line feed)

\r

carriage return

\t

tab

\e

escape

\v

vertical tab

\s

space

\d

delete

\ddd

the octal value ddd

\xhh

The hexadecimal value hh.

\x{h...}

The hexadecimal value h....

\c

any other character literally, for example \\ for backslash,
\" for ")

To make these functions easier to use, in combination with the
function io:get_line which terminates the input line with
a new line, the $ characters also matches a string ending
with "...\n". The following examples
define Erlang data types:

Regular expressions are written as Erlang strings when used with the functions in this module. This means that any \ or " characters in a regular expression
string must be written with \ as they are also escape characters for the string. For example, the regular expression string for Erlang floats is:
"(\\+|-)?[0-9]+\\.[0-9]+((E|e)(\\+|-)?[0-9]+)?".

It is not really necessary to have the escape sequences as part of the regular expression syntax as they can always be generated directly in the string. They are included for completeness and can they can also be useful when generating regular expressions, or when they are entered other than with Erlang strings.